+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 2 of 2

XL97: Position text boxes (or data labels) w/out VBA

  1. #1
    LeAnne
    Guest

    XL97: Position text boxes (or data labels) w/out VBA

    Greetings, all -

    I have a set of 3 charts, each a box-and-whisker plot with 2 added
    horizontal lines (actually "areas") which bisect the plot area into 3
    sections. I would like to label the top section of each chart as "Good,"
    the middle section as "Fair," and the bottom portion as "Poor." I'm
    using text boxes instead of data labels since the bottom portion doesn't
    really have a named data source, it's just the plot area. I'm finding
    this difficult to explain...I'd like to position these text boxes so
    that they are in the same relative position in each chart. Obviously I
    can select all 3 text boxes in each chart, then align right, align
    vertically and so on...but I need a way to position each group of text
    boxes so that they appear in the same position on each chart, so that
    when all 3 charts are shown together on 1 page or slide the labels "match."

    Using XL97 (yeah, yeah, I'm a Neanderthal, I know...), Win XP. My VBA
    skills are hopeless, so a non-code fix, if possible, is very much preferred.

    I hope I've been sufficiently clear. Any help or advice would be much
    appreciated.

    tia,

    LeAnne

  2. #2
    LeAnne
    Guest

    Re: XL97: Position text boxes (or data labels) w/out VBA

    Never mind, problem solved...in a way I would never, ever have imagined
    on my own.

    Did you know that you can Copy a "donor" chart, then Paste Special the
    format of the donor chart to the recipient chart?? I sure didn't. JICYI

    Select the chart area of the donor chart, right-click, Copy.
    Select the chart area of the recipient chart, Edit, Paste Special,
    "Formats."

    I just arranged all of the chart objects, including the text boxes, in
    the donor chart the way I wanted, then pasted the format ONLY to the
    remaining charts. No more clicking, dragging, and eyeballing objects or
    groups of objects!

    I found this nifty shortcut at (watch the linewrap):

    http://itstutorials.niu.edu/download...ck%20quide.pdf


    What did we ever do before them thar internets?!?

    LeAnne

+ Reply to Thread

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0 RC 1